Psyche
PSYCHE
BY WALTER S. CRAMP
With Illustrations from Drawings by W. T. BENDA
BOSTON · LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY · MCMV
Copyright, 1905 , By Little, Brown, and Company.
All rights reserved Published April, 1905 THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.
TO MY DEAR PARENTS WHO, HAVING GATHERED IN THE MIDDAY OF THEIR LIVES BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS OF PEACE, WEAR THEM STILL FRESH AND LOVELY AT EVENTIDE
PSYCHE
IN the year 23 A. D. there lived in Rome a youth named Gannon. He was a comely lad, seventeen years old, with a bright and happy face covered with a light down. His profile was Greek. His head was poised gracefully on his vigorous young shoulders. His dark eyebrows were slightly curved, and two bright black eyes sparkled under them. His black hair was short and brushed forward. He was neither tall nor stout. He wore a tunic which came down to above his knees, leaving bare his well-shaped neck, arms, and legs. On his small feet were leather sandals, held on by a string of the same material, interlaced and tied above his ankles. His whole air betokened a frank, ingenuous nature; and a cheery influence seemed to surround him, invisible yet perceptible to every one with whom he came in contact.
He was sitting in a room of the Praetorian Camp, translating a letter from Greek into Latin. The task was not a difficult one; for his parents were Greek, and he had been taught by his father to speak and write both languages with fluency and exactness. His duties consisted in copying despatches, writing and translating letters, and taking care of some of the private correspondence of Sejanus, the commander of the Praetorians. The situation, although a responsible one for so young a lad, had been easily secured. Through a friend of his father he had obtained a position as secretary to Macro, an officer in the camp. One day, noticing his intelligent and handsome face, Sejanus took him to his office and tested his ability. The result was so favorable that he made Gannon one of his own secretaries.